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'Administration hasn't answered the question': Key detail about DC suspect remains unclear

A veteran reporter noticed that President Donald Trump's top officials are dodging questions about exactly when the suspected Washington, D.C., gunman was granted asylum.

Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. Attorney for D.C., identified the suspect as Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan national who had been living in Washington state, but FBI Director Kash Patel avoided a direct question on whether his asylum claim was granted during Trump's presidency, as multiple outlets have reported.

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Republican lawmaker further enflames burning MAGA house with new 'eye-popping' allegations

MS Now Opinion Columnist Ja’han Jones said Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) is lobbing more firebombs into an already burning MAGA house this week.

“Conspiracy theories are devouring any semblance of unity among the MAGA movement these days,” writes Jones, revealing never-before seen rifts tearing the formerly Trump-centric community to pieces.

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C-SPAN caller angry about media's 'hatred' threatens to 'shoot these people's brains out'

A C-SPAN caller who said she was upset by "hatred" in the media suddenly pivoted and threatened to "shoot these people's brains out."

During the Thanksgiving Day edition of C-SPAN's Washington Journal program, a woman named Gerry called in from New Jersey to complain about the network.

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'Under which administration?' FBI's Kash Patel avoids question on DC gunman's asylum

FBI Director Kash Patel dodged a question about whether the suspected Washington, D.C., gunman was granted asylum during Donald Trump's presidency.

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro identified the suspect in the shootings of two National Guard troops as 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal, an Afghan national who had been living in Bellingham, Washington, and she and other Trump administration officials blamed his presence in the U.S. on President Joe Biden, but Patel declined to answer a direct question about his asylum status.

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'Kiss the ground and thank God!' Pirro erupts after Trump blamed for DC shooting

United States Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro shouted down a reporter for noting that some people blamed President Donald Trump for deploying the National Guard to Washington after an Afghan national shot two service members.

"I want to ask, if you could please comment on, obviously, under the Biden administration, the words are it was a 'failed withdrawal' [from Afghanistan]," the reporter noted during a press conference on Thursday. "There are people who are also upset with the president, believing that the National Guard members should not even have been there if it were not for the executive order."

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‘Biggest mistake of her life’: GOP lawmakers dish on Marjorie Taylor Greene

Marjorie Taylor Greene’s surprise retirement announcement seems to have House Republicans breathing sighs of relief.

Before the far-right Georgia representative shocked the political world and announced her plan to retire on the eve of the next Jan. 6 anniversary, her fellow Republicans wanted nothing to do with her ongoing digital brawl with the president over the Epstein files.

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Pam Bondi blames Joe Biden’s autopen for DC shooting: ‘These progressive left idiots!’

Attorney General Pam Bondi lashed out at former President Joe Biden's use of the autopen after an Afghan national whom the Trump administration granted asylum gunned down two members of the National Guard in Washington, D.C.

"Now we're evaluating everything," Bondi told Fox News host Emily Compagno on Thursday morning. "Everyone's been up all night since this happened, evaluating everything regarding this monster."

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'Is this what I voted for?' Trump-loving fisherman slams president's new policy

The Coast Guard stationed a helicopter at Yaquina Bay, Ore., after a fishing boat capsized in 1985, killing three people because rescue aircraft were too far away to respond fast enough. When the Obama administration tried to move the helicopter to North Bend in 2014 local residents sued and Congress intervened to force the Coast Guard to provide ample notice and research to support any relocation of the helicopter — even for maintenance.

So, when rumors spread a few weeks ago that the helicopter was gone, many fishermen dismissed them, reports the New York Times, primarily because the very idea was ridiculous. Response times from the alternative landing site in North Bend can take up to an hour or longer.

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Trump choice 'swamped' health care fund and keeps driving up costs: experts

The Trump administration has missed the "root cause" of ongoing health care costs, an economics expert warned.

Vivian Ho, the chair of health economics at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, suggested costs are running so high in health care because of policies brought in by President Donald Trump and his team. Speaking with Politico, Ho suggested there's "been no break" for health care to recover from the turbulent economy under the Trump administration.

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DC shooting suspect worked with CIA-backed units in Afghanistan

The suspected gunman who shot two National Guard troops near the White House worked with CIA-backed military units during the U.S. war in his home country of Afghanistan, according to the agency.

Sources familiar with the investigation identified the suspect as 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe said he came to the U.S. in September 2021 through a Biden-era immigration program for Afghans who had worked with the U.S. government, reported the New York Times.

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Trump will 'crack down even harder' on national guard deployment after shooting: analysis

Donald Trump is likely to crack down on National Guard deployments following a shooting in Washington D.C., a political commentator believes.

Writing in The Guardian, David Smith suggested the shooting of two National Guard troops near the White House would leave the president responding with tougher measures. Those measures, which may act as a response to the shooting which left two National Guard members in critically injured, will have an uncertain impact, Smith says.

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Trump targeting Democrats over military could 'backfire' for GOP

Donald Trump's decision to go after several Democrats could "backfire" according to a political commentator.

The president accused the six Democrats, including Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, of "sedition" and would go on to suggest they should be executed for calling on members of the military to refuse unlawful orders. Trump's decision to go after the six Democrats, who appeared in a video encouraging military personnel to stand up against illegal orders, could backfire, according to Politico.

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'Trump's golden era': Gavin Newsom press office mocks president's Thanksgiving shortcoming

California governor Gavin Newsom's press office has mocked the Trump administration in a scathing post to social media.

A screenshot of the Drudge Report front page was posted to X by the Governor Newsom Press Office, which took aim at Trump's Thanksgiving policy blunders. Turkey prices were reported to have surged 24% and retail sales have dwindled as the cost-of-living crisis continues across the country.

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